ABSTRACT

Featuring a new fifty-page interview with Hans J. Morgenthau by Bernard Johnson, this volume on the renowed scholar and philosopher demonstrates how pervasive is his mark on the study of international relations and political philosophy. The interview illuminates Morgenthau's intellectual development in Europe between the world wars and in the United States. It is in recognition of his unsurpassed contribution to the field of international relations and political philosophy that this collection of contributions from distinguished scholars has been assembled. The continuation and refinement of his work in this book prove the lasting value of his philosophical truths in the understanding of human nature, the role of power at all levels of society, and his concept of national interest.

part |34 pages

Introductory Essays

chapter |11 pages

Philosophy and Politics

The Two Commitments of Hans J. Morgenthau

chapter |9 pages

The Mission of Morgenthau

part |124 pages

Political Philosophy

chapter |11 pages

General Education and the Understanding of Politics

The Case of Hans J. Morgenthau

chapter |11 pages

Morgenthau as Historian

chapter |8 pages

Normative Constraints on Statecraft

Some Comments on Morgenthau’s Perspective

chapter |10 pages

Morgenthau

The Idealism of a Realist

chapter |8 pages

Morgenthau vs. Machiavelli

Political Realism and Power Politics

chapter |13 pages

Power, Self-interest, and Chicago Politics

A Comparison of the Theory of Politics among Nations and the Reality of Politics in Chicago

chapter |5 pages

An Approximation of Justice

part |210 pages

International Relations

chapter |20 pages

Fifty Years of International Government

Reflections on the League Of Nations and the United Nations

chapter |4 pages

Global Good and Evil

chapter |17 pages

The Statesman and the Critic

Kissinger and Morgenthau

chapter |22 pages

Neutrality and Nonalignment

Foreign Policies of Independence in the Twentieth Century

chapter |54 pages

Postscript to the Transaction Edition

Bernard Johnson’s Interview with Hans J. Morgenthau